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COS 312 DAY 4 Tony Gauvin

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COS 312 DAY 4

Tony Gauvin

Ch 1 -2

Agenda• Questions? • Assignment 1 Corrected

– 7 A’s– Few minor issues with style and conventions

• Assignment 2 Posted– Due Feb 5 prior to class

• Capstones proposals due Feb 5– Can be a group project

• Finish Using Classes and Objects (Chap 3 of text) • Begin Using Conditionals and Loops

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Grading Criteria • Criteria 1 30 % Does the program compile with no errors or

warnings?• Criteria 2 50% Does the program run and produce the intended

outputs for the intended inputs?• Criteria 3 5% Is the Code properly Commented?

• Criteria 4 5% Does the Code adhere to proper style and conventions for Java?

• Criteria 5 10% Is the code an original creative work of the student?

Using leveraged code without citation 0Students submitting duplicate code as another student 0

1 - 3

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Style Convention Issues• No space between a method and it’s parameter

list – System.out.println(“<- No Spaces”)

• Identifiers must not start with a capital letter– myFirstInt not MyFirstInt

• Spaces before after math operators– num1 + num2 not num1+num2

1 - 4

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The Halting Problem • Will a program run to conclusion for a given set

of inputs? • Halting Theorem first proved to be unsolvable by

Alan Turing (new movie The Imitation Game )– https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=macM_MtS_w4 – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92WHN-pAFCs– http://www.cgl.uwaterloo.ca/~csk/halt/ – http://

plus.maths.org/content/what-computers-cant-do

1 - 5

Chapter 3

Using Classes and Objects

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Formatting Ouput• It is often necessary to format values in certain

ways so that they can be presented properly

• The Java API contains classes that provide formatting capabilities

• The NumberFormat class allows you to format values as currency or percentages

• The DecimalFormat class allows you to format values based on a pattern

• Both are part of the java.text package

3 - 7

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Formatting Output• The NumberFormat class has static methods that

return a formatter objectgetCurrencyInstance()

getPercentInstance()

• Each formatter object has a method called format that returns a string with the specified information in the appropriate format for the given computer

3 - 8

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Formatting Output• Some methods of the NumberFormat class:

3 - 9

http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/NumberFormat.html

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// Purchase.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of the NumberFormat class to format output.//********************************************************************

import java.util.Scanner;import java.text.NumberFormat;

public class Purchase{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Calculates the final price of a purchased item using values // entered by the user. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { final double TAX_RATE = 0.06; // 6% sales tax

int quantity; double subtotal, tax, totalCost, unitPrice;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

NumberFormat fmt1 = NumberFormat.getCurrencyInstance(); NumberFormat fmt2 = NumberFormat.getPercentInstance();

3 - 10

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

System.out.print("Enter the quantity: "); quantity = scan.nextInt();

System.out.print("Enter the unit price: "); unitPrice = scan.nextDouble();

subtotal = quantity * unitPrice; tax = subtotal * TAX_RATE; totalCost = subtotal + tax;

// Print output with appropriate formatting System.out.println("Subtotal: " + fmt1.format(subtotal)); System.out.println("Tax: " + fmt1.format(tax) + " at " + fmt2.format(TAX_RATE)); System.out.println("Total: " + fmt1.format(totalCost)); }}

3 - 11

Code\Chap3\Purchase.java

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Formatting Output• The DecimalFormat class can be used to format

a floating point value in various ways

• For example, you can specify that the number should be truncated to three decimal places

• The constructor of the DecimalFormat class takes a string that represents a pattern for the formatted number

3 - 12

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Formatting Output• Some methods of the DecimalFormat class:

3 - 13

http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/DecimalFormat.html

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// CircleStats.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the formatting of decimal values using the// DecimalFormat class.//********************************************************************

import java.util.Scanner;import java.text.DecimalFormat;

public class CircleStats{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Calculates the area and circumference of a circle given its // radius. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { int radius; double area, circumference;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

System.out.print("Enter the circle's radius: "); radius = scan.nextInt();

3 - 14

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

area = Math.PI * Math.pow(radius, 2); circumference = 2 * Math.PI * radius;

// Round the output to three decimal places DecimalFormat fmt = new DecimalFormat("0.###");

System.out.println("The circle's area: " + fmt.format(area)); System.out.println("The circle's circumference: " + fmt.format(circumference)); }}

3 - 15

Code\Chap3\CircleStats.java

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Enumerated Types• Java allows you to define an enumerated type,

which can then be used to declare variables

• An enumerated type establishes all possible values for a variable of that type

• The values are identifiers of your own choosing

• The following declaration creates an enumerated type called Seasonenum Season { winter, spring, summer, fall};

• Any number of values can be listed3 - 16

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Enumerated Types• Once a type is defined, a variable of that type can

be declaredSeason time;

and it can be assigned a valuetime = Season.fall;

• The values are specified through the name of the type

• Enumerated types are type-safe – you cannot assign any value other than those listed

3 - 17

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Enumerated Types• Internally, each value of an enumerated type is

stored as an integer, called its ordinal value

• The first value in an enumerated type has an ordinal value of zero, the second one, and so on

• However, you cannot assign a numeric value to an enumerated type, even if it corresponds to a valid ordinal value

3 - 18

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Enumerated Types• The declaration of an enumerated type is a

special type of class, and each variable of that type is an object

• The ordinal method returns the ordinal value of the object

• The name method returns the name of the identifier corresponding to the object's value

3 - 19

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Example Enumerated TypesUseful for creating a card game enum Suits {spade, clubs, hearts, diamonds}enum Face {ace, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, jack, queen, king}Useful for a chess gameenum pieces {king, queen, rook, bishop, knight, pawn}

1 - 20

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// IceCream.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of enumerated types.//********************************************************************

public class IceCream{ enum Flavor {vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, fudgeRipple, coffee, rockyRoad, mintChocolateChip, cookieDough}

//----------------------------------------------------------------- // Creates and uses variables of the Flavor type. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { Flavor cone1, cone2, cone3;

cone1 = Flavor.rockyRoad; cone2 = Flavor.chocolate;

System.out.println("cone1 value: " + cone1); System.out.println("cone1 ordinal: " + cone1.ordinal()); System.out.println("cone1 name: " + cone1.name());

3 - 21

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

System.out.println(); System.out.println("cone2 value: " + cone2); System.out.println("cone2 ordinal: " + cone2.ordinal()); System.out.println("cone2 name: " + cone2.name());

cone3 = cone1;

System.out.println(); System.out.println("cone3 value: " + cone3); System.out.println("cone3 ordinal: " + cone3.ordinal()); System.out.println("cone3 name: " + cone3.name()); }}

3 - 22

Code\Chap3\IceCream.java

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Wrapper Classes• The java.lang package contains wrapper

classes that correspond to each primitive type:

3 - 23

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Wrapper Classes• The following declaration creates an Integer

object:Integer age = new Integer(40);

• An object of a wrapper class can be used in any situation where a primitive value will not suffice

• For example, some objects serve as collections of other objects

• Primitive values could not be stored in such collections, but wrapper objects could be

3 - 24

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Wrapper Classes• Wrapper classes also contain static methods that

help manage the associated type• For example, the Integer class contains a

method to convert an integer stored in a String to an int value:

num = Integer.parseInt(str);

• The wrapper classes often contain useful constants as well

• For example, the Integer class contains MIN_VALUE and MAX_VALUE which hold the smallest and largest int values

3 - 25

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Wrapper Classes• Some methods of the Integer class:

3 - 26

http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/lang/Integer.html

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Autoboxing• Autoboxing is the automatic conversion of a primitive value to

a corresponding wrapper object

Integer obj;int num = 42;obj = num;

• The assignment creates the appropriate Integer object

• The reverse conversion (called unboxing) also occurs automatically as needed

• A analogy would be autoboxing is wrapping a primitive type to make it an object and unboxing is unwrapping a wrapper object to get the primitive type

3 - 27

Chapter 4

Conditionals and Loops

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Chapter Scope• Flow of control• Boolean expressions• if and switch statements• Comparing data• while, do, and for loops• Iterators

4 - 29

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Flow of Control• Statement execution is linear unless specified

otherwise• Some programming statements allow us to:

– decide whether or not to execute a particular statement

– execute a statement over and over, repetitively

• These decisions are based on boolean expressions (or conditions) that evaluate to true or false

• The order of statement execution is called the flow of control

4 - 30

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Conditional Statements• A conditional statement lets us choose which

statement will be executed next• Therefore they are sometimes called selection

statements• Conditional statements give us the power to

make basic decisions• The Java conditional statements are the

– if statement– if-else statement– switch statement

4 - 31

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The if Statement• The syntax of a basic if statement is:

4 - 32

if ( condition ) { statement; }

if is a Javareserved word

The condition must be aboolean expression. It mustevaluate to either true or false.

If the condition is true, the statement is executed.If it is false, the statement is skipped.

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Equality and Relational Operators• Often, conditions are based equality operators or

relational operators:

4 - 33

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Conditions• Examples of if statements:

if (total == sum) System.out.println("total equals sum");

if (count > 50) System.out.println("count is more than 50");

if (letter != 'x') System.out.println("letter is not x");

4 - 34

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Logical Operators• Conditions can also use logical operators:

• They all take boolean operands and produce boolean results

• Logical NOT (!) is a unary operator (it operates on one operand)

• Logical AND (&&) and logical OR (||) are binary operators (each operates on two operands)

4 - 35

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Logical NOT• The logical NOT operation is also called logical

negation or logical complement

• If some boolean condition a is true, then !a is false; if a is false, then !a is true

• Logical expressions can be shown using a truth table:

4 - 36

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Logical AND and Logical OR• The logical AND expression

a && b

is true if both a and b are true, and false otherwise

• The logical OR expression

a || b

is true if a or b or both are true, and false otherwise

4 - 37

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Logical AND and Logical OR• A truth table shows all possible true-false

combinations of the terms

• Since && and || each have two operands, there are four possible combinations

4 - 38

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Logical Operators• Expressions that use logical operators can form

complex conditions

if (total < MAX+5 && !found) System.out.println("processing…");

• All logical operators have lower precedence than the relational operators

• Logical NOT has higher precedence than logical AND (&&) and logical OR (||)

4 - 39

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Logical Operators• Specific expressions can be evaluated using truth

tables:

4 - 40

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Short-Circuited Operators• The processing of logical AND and logical OR is

short-circuited

• If the left operand is sufficient to determine the result, the right operand is not evaluated

if (count != 0 && total/count > MAX) System.out.println("Testing");

• This type of processing must be used carefully

4 - 41

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The if Statement• Consider the following if statement:

if (sum > MAX) { delta = sum – MAX; }System.out.println("The sum is " + sum);

• First the condition is evaluated -- the value of sum is either greater than the value of MAX, or it is not

• If the condition is true, the assignment statement is executed -- if it isn’t, it is skipped.

• Either way, the call to println is executed next4 - 42

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The if Statement• The logic of an if statement:

4 - 43

//********************************************************************// Age.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of an if statement.//********************************************************************

import java.util.Scanner;

public class Age{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Reads the user's age and prints comments accordingly. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { final int MINOR = 21;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

System.out.print("Enter your age: "); int age = scan.nextInt();

System.out.println("You entered: " + age);

if (age < MINOR) { System.out.println("Youth is a wonderful thing. Enjoy."); }

System.out.println("Age is a state of mind."); }}

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase 4 - 44

Code\Chap4\Age.java

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Indentation• The statement controlled by the if statement is

indented to indicate that relationship– Should also be in { } for proper style conventions

• The use of a consistent indentation style makes a program easier to read and understand

• Although it makes no difference to the compiler, proper indentation is crucial

4 - 45

"Always code as if the person who ends up maintaining your code will be a violent psychopath who knows where you live."

-- Martin Golding

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The if-else Statement• An else clause can be added to an if statement to make

an if-else statement

• If the condition is true, statement1 is executed; if the condition is false, statement2 is executed

• One or the other will be executed, but not both

4 - 46

if ( condition ) { statement1; }else { statement2; }

//********************************************************************// Wages.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of an if-else statement.//********************************************************************

import java.text.NumberFormat;import java.util.Scanner;

public class Wages{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Reads the number of hours worked and calculates wages. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { final double RATE = 8.25; // regular pay rate final int STANDARD = 40; // standard hours in a work week

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

double pay = 0.0;

System.out.print("Enter the number of hours worked: "); int hours = scan.nextInt();

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase 4 - 47

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

System.out.println();

// Pay overtime at "time and a half" if (hours > STANDARD) { pay = STANDARD * RATE + (hours - STANDARD) * (RATE * 1.5); } else { pay = hours * RATE; }

NumberFormat fmt = NumberFormat.getCurrencyInstance(); System.out.println("Gross earnings: " + fmt.format(pay)); }}

4 - 48

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Block Statements• Several statements can be grouped together into

a block statement delimited by braces

• A block statement can be used wherever a statement is called for in the Java syntax rules

if (total > MAX){ System.out.println("Error!!"); errorCount++;}

4 - 49

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The if-else Statement

4 - 50

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// Guessing.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of a block statement in an if-else.//********************************************************************

import java.util.*;

public class Guessing{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Plays a simple guessing game with the user. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { final int MAX = 10; int answer, guess;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in); Random generator = new Random();

answer = generator.nextInt(MAX) + 1;

System.out.print("I'm thinking of a number between 1 and " + MAX + ". Guess what it is: ");

4 - 51

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

guess = scan.nextInt();

if (guess == answer) System.out.println("You got it! Good guessing!"); else { System.out.println("That is not correct, sorry."); System.out.println("The number was " + answer); } }}

4 - 52

Code\Chap4\Guessing.java

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Indentation Revisited• Remember that indentation is for the human reader,

and is ignored by the computer

if (total > MAX) System.out.println("Error!!"); errorCount++;

• Despite what is implied by the indentation, the increment will occur whether the condition is true or not

4 - 53

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The if-else Statement• In an if-else statement, the if portion, or the else portion, or both, could be block statements

4 - 54

if (total > MAX){ System.out.println("Error!!"); errorCount++;}else{ System.out.println("Total: " + total); current = total*2;}

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The Conditional Operator• Java has a conditional operator that uses a boolean

condition to determine which of two expressions is evaluated

• Its syntax is

condition ? expression1 : expression2

• If the condition is true, expression1 is evaluated; if it is false, expression2 is evaluated

• The value of the entire conditional operator is the value of the selected expression

4 - 55

true false

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The Conditional Operator• The conditional operator is similar to an if-else

statement, except that it is an expression that returns a value

• For examplelarger = ((num1 > num2) ? num1 :

num2);

• If num1 is greater than num2, then num1 is assigned to larger; otherwise, num2 is assigned to larger

• The conditional operator is ternary because it requires three operands

4 - 56

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The Conditional Operator• Another example:

System.out.println ("Your change is " + count + ((count == 1) ? "Dime" : "Dimes"));

• If count equals 1, then "Dime" is printed

• If count is anything other than 1, then "Dimes" is printed

4 - 57

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Nested if Statements• The statement executed as a result of an if

statement or else clause could be another if statement

• These are called nested if statements

• An else clause is matched to the last unmatched if (no matter what the indentation implies)

• Braces can be used to specify the if statement to which an else clause belongs

4 - 58

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// MinOfThree.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of nested if statements.//********************************************************************

import java.util.Scanner;

public class MinOfThree{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Reads three integers from the user and determines the smallest // value. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { int num1, num2, num3, min = 0;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

System.out.println("Enter three integers: "); num1 = scan.nextInt(); num2 = scan.nextInt(); num3 = scan.nextInt();

4 - 59

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

if (num1 < num2) if (num1 < num3) min = num1; else min = num3; else if (num2 < num3) min = num2; else min = num3;

System.out.println("Minimum value: " + min); }}

4 - 60

Code\Chap4\MinOfThree.java

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Comparing Data• When comparing data using boolean

expressions, it's important to understand the nuances of certain data types

• Let's examine some key situations:– comparing floating point values for equality– comparing characters– comparing strings (alphabetical order)– comparing object vs. comparing object references

4 - 61

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Comparing Float Values• You should rarely use the equality operator (==) when

comparing two floating point values (float or double)

• Two floating point values are equal only if their underlying binary representations match exactly (hardly ever happens)

1.49999999999999999 is not equal to 1.499999999999999999

• Computations often result in slight differences that may be irrelevant

• In many situations, you might consider two floating point numbers to be “close enough” even if they aren't exactly equal

4 - 62

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Comparing Float Values• To determine the equality of two floats, you may

want to use the following technique:if (Math.abs(f1 - f2) < TOLERANCE) System.out.println("Essentially equal");

• If the difference between the two floating point values is less than the tolerance, they are considered to be equal

• The tolerance could be set to any appropriate level, such as 0.000001

4 - 63

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Comparing Characters• As we've discussed, Java character data is based

on the Unicode character set• Unicode establishes a particular numeric value

for each character, and therefore an ordering• We can use relational operators on character

data based on this ordering• For example, the character '+' is less than the

character 'J' because it comes before it in the Unicode character set

• Appendix C provides an overview of Unicode4 - 64

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Comparing Characters• In Unicode, the digit characters (0-9) are

contiguous and in order• Likewise, the uppercase letters (A-Z) and

lowercase letters (a-z) are contiguous and in order

4 - 65

Characters Unicode Values

0 – 9 48 through 57

A – Z 65 through 90

a – z 97 through 122

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Comparing Strings• Remember that in Java a character string is an

object

• The equals method can be called with strings to determine if two strings contain exactly the same characters in the same order

• The equals method returns a boolean result

if (name1.equals(name2))

System.out.println("Same name");

4 - 66

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Comparing Strings• We cannot use the relational operators to

compare strings

• The String class contains a method called compareTo to determine if one string comes before another

• A call to name1.compareTo(name2)– returns zero if name1 and name2 are equal (contain the same

characters)

– returns a negative value if name1 is less than name2

– returns a positive value if name1 is greater than name24 - 67

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Comparing Stringsif (name1.compareTo(name2) < 0) System.out.println(name1 + "comes first");else if (name1.compareTo(name2) == 0) System.out.println("Same name"); else System.out.println(name2 + "comes first");

• Because comparing characters and strings is based on a character set, it is called a lexicographic ordering

4 - 68

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Lexicographic Ordering• Lexicographic ordering is not strictly alphabetical

when uppercase and lowercase characters are mixed

• For example, the string "Great" comes before the string "fantastic" because all of the uppercase letters come before all of the lowercase letters in Unicode

• Also, short strings come before longer strings with the same prefix (lexicographically)

• Therefore "book" comes before "bookcase"

4 - 69

Code\Chap4\Paradox.java

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

== vs. equals• The == operator can be applied to objects – it

returns true if the two references are aliases of each other

• The equals method is defined for all objects, and unless we redefine it when we write a class, it has the same semantics as the == operator

• It has been redefined in the String class to compare the characters in the two strings

• When creating new classes, you can/should redefine the equals method to return true under whatever conditions are appropriate

4 - 70

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The switch Statement• The switch statement provides another way to

decide which statement to execute next

• The switch statement evaluates an expression, then attempts to match the result to one of several possible cases

• Each case contains a value and a list of statements

• The flow of control transfers to statement associated with the first case value that matches

4 - 71

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The switch Statement• The general syntax of a switch statement:

4 - 72

switch ( expression ){ case value1 : statement-list1 case value2 : statement-list2 case value3 : statement-list3 case ...

}

switchandcaseare

reservedwords

If expressionmatches value2,control jumpsto here

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The switch Statement• Often a break statement is used as the last

statement in each case's statement list

• A break statement causes control to transfer to the end of the switch statement

• If a break statement is not used, the flow of control will continue into the next case

• Sometimes this may be appropriate, but often we want to execute only the statements associated with one case

4 - 73

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The switch Statement• An example of a switch statement:

4 - 74

switch (option){ case 'A': aCount++; break; case 'B': bCount++; break; case 'C': cCount++; break;}

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The switch Statement• A switch statement can have an optional default

case

• The default case has no associated value and simply uses the reserved word default

• If the default case is present, control will transfer to it if no other case value matches

• If there is no default case, and no other value matches, control falls through to the statement after the switch

4 - 75

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The switch Statement• The expression of a switch statement must result

in an integral type, meaning an integer (byte, short, int, long) or a char

• It cannot be a boolean value or a floating point value (float or double)

• The implicit boolean condition in a switch statement is equality

• You cannot perform relational checks with a switch statement

4 - 76

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// GradeReport.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of a switch statement.//********************************************************************

import java.util.Scanner;

public class GradeReport{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Reads a grade from the user and prints comments accordingly. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { int grade, category;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

System.out.print("Enter a numeric grade (0 to 100): "); grade = scan.nextInt();

category = grade / 10;

System.out.print("That grade is ");

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

switch (category) { case 10: System.out.println("a perfect score. Well done."); break; case 9: System.out.println("well above average. Excellent."); break; case 8: System.out.println("above average. Nice job."); break; case 7: System.out.println("average."); break; case 6: System.out.print("below average. Please see the "); System.out.println("instructor for assistance."); break; default: System.out.println("not passing."); } }}

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Code\Chap4\GradeReport.java

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Loops• Repetition statements allow us to execute a

statement multiple times• Often they are referred to as loops• Like conditional statements, they are controlled

by boolean expressions• Java has three kinds of repetition statements:

– the while loop– the do loop– the for loop

• The programmer should choose the right kind of loop for the situation

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The while Loop• A while loop has the following syntax

• If the condition is true, the statement is executed

• Then the condition is evaluated again, and if it is still true, the statement is executed again

• The statement is executed repeatedly until the condition becomes false

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while ( condition ) statement;

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The while Loop• The logic of a while loop:

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The while Loop• Example:

int count = 1;while (count <= 5){ System.out.println (count); count++;}

• If the condition of a while loop is false initially, the statement is never executed

• Therefore, the body of a while loop will execute zero or more times

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The while Loop• Let's look at some examples of loop processing

• A loop can be used to maintain a running sum

• A sentinel value is a special input value that represents the end of input

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// Average.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of a while loop, a sentinel value, and a// running sum.//********************************************************************

import java.text.DecimalFormat;import java.util.Scanner;

public class Average{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Computes the average of a set of values entered by the user. // The running sum is printed as the numbers are entered. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { int sum = 0, value, count = 0; double average;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

System.out.print("Enter an integer (0 to quit): "); value = scan.nextInt();

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

while (value != 0) // sentinel value of 0 to terminate loop { count++;

sum += value; System.out.println("The sum so far is " + sum);

System.out.print("Enter an integer (0 to quit): "); value = scan.nextInt(); }

System.out.println();

if (count == 0) System.out.println("No values were entered."); else { average = (double)sum / count;

DecimalFormat fmt = new DecimalFormat("0.###"); System.out.println("The average is " + fmt.format(average)); } }}

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The while Loop• A loop can also be used for input validation,

making a program more robust

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// WinPercentage.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of a while loop for input validation.//********************************************************************

import java.text.NumberFormat;import java.util.Scanner;

public class WinPercentage{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Computes the percentage of games won by a team. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { final int NUM_GAMES = 12; int won; double ratio;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

System.out.print("Enter the number of games won (0 to " + NUM_GAMES + "): "); won = scan.nextInt();

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

while (won < 0 || won > NUM_GAMES) { System.out.print("Invalid input. Please reenter: "); won = scan.nextInt(); }

ratio = (double)won / NUM_GAMES;

NumberFormat fmt = NumberFormat.getPercentInstance();

System.out.println(); System.out.println("Winning percentage: " + fmt.format(ratio)); }}

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Infinite Loops• The body of a loop eventually must make the

condition false

• If not, it is called an infinite loop, which will execute until the user interrupts the program

• This is a common logical error

• You should double check the logic of a program to ensure that your loops will terminate normally

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Infinite Loops• An example of an infinite loop:

int count = 1;while (count <= 25){ System.out.println (count); count = count - 1;}

• This loop will continue executing until interrupted (Control-C) or until an underflow error occurs

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Nested Loops• Similar to nested if statements, loops can be

nested as well

• That is, the body of a loop can contain another loop

• For each iteration of the outer loop, the inner loop iterates completely

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Nested Loops• How many times will the output be printed?count1 = 1;while (count1 <= 10){ count2 = 1; while (count2 <= 50) { System.out.println ("Here again"); count2++; } count1++;}

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// PalindromeTester.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of nested while loops.//********************************************************************

import java.util.Scanner;

public class PalindromeTester{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Tests strings to see if they are palindromes. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { String str, another = "y"; int left, right;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

while (another.equalsIgnoreCase("y")) // allows y or Y { System.out.println("Enter a potential palindrome:"); str = scan.nextLine();

left = 0; right = str.length() - 1;

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

while (str.charAt(left) == str.charAt(right) && left < right) { left++; right--; }

System.out.println();

if (left < right) System.out.println("That string is NOT a palindrome."); else System.out.println("That string IS a palindrome.");

System.out.println(); System.out.print("Test another palindrome (y/n)? "); another = scan.nextLine(); } }}

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Iterators• An iterator is an object that allows you to process

a collection of items one at a time

• It lets you step through each item in turn and process it as needed

• An iterator object has a hasNext method that returns true if there is at least one more item to process

• The next method returns the next item

• Iterator objects are defined using the Iterator interface, which is discussed further in Chapter 9

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Iterators• Some classes in the Java API are iterators

• The Scanner class is an iterator– the hasNext method returns true if there is more data to be

scanned

– the next method returns the next scanned token as a string

• The Scanner class also has variations on the hasNext method for specific data types (such as hasNextInt)

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Iterators• The fact that a Scanner is an iterator is

particularly helpful when reading input from a file

• Suppose we wanted to read and process a list of URLs stored in a file

• One scanner can be set up to read each line of the input until the end of the file is encountered

• Another scanner can be set up for each URL to process each part of the path

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// URLDissector.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of Scanner to read file input and parse it// using alternative delimiters.//********************************************************************

import java.util.Scanner;import java.io.*;

public class URLDissector{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Reads urls from a file and prints their path components. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException { String url; Scanner fileScan, urlScan;

fileScan = new Scanner(new File("websites.inp"));

// Read and process each line of the file while (fileScan.hasNext()) { url = fileScan.nextLine(); System.out.println("URL: " + url);

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

urlScan = new Scanner(url); urlScan.useDelimiter("/");

// Print each part of the url while (urlScan.hasNext()) System.out.println(" " + urlScan.next());

System.out.println(); } }}

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The do Loop• The do loop has the following syntax:

• The statement is executed once initially, and then the condition is evaluated

• The statement is executed repeatedly until the condition becomes false

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do{ statement;}while ( condition )

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The do Loop• The logic of a do loop:

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The do Loop• An example of a do loop:

int count = 0;do{ count++; System.out.println (count);} while (count < 5);

• The body of a do loop is executed at least once

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// ReverseNumber.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of a do loop.//********************************************************************

import java.util.Scanner;

public class ReverseNumber{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Reverses the digits of an integer mathematically. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { int number, lastDigit, reverse = 0;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

System.out.print("Enter a positive integer: "); number = scan.nextInt();

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

do { lastDigit = number % 10; reverse = (reverse * 10) + lastDigit; number = number / 10; } while (number > 0);

System.out.println("That number reversed is " + reverse); }}

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Comparing while and do Loops

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The for Loop• The for loop has the following syntax:

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for ( initialization ; condition ; increment ) statement;

The initializationis executed once

before the loop begins

The statement isexecuted until the

condition becomes false

The increment portion is executed at the end of each iteration

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The for Loop• The logic of a for loop:

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The for Loop• A for loop is functionally equivalent to the

following while loop structure:

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initialization;while ( condition ){ statement; increment;}

Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The for Loop• An example of a for loop:

for (int count=1; count <= 5; count++) System.out.println (count);

• The initialization section can be used to declare a variable

• Like a while loop, the condition of a for loop is tested prior to executing the loop body

• Therefore, the body of a for loop will execute zero or more times

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The for Loop• The increment section can perform any

calculationfor (int num=100; num > 0; num -= 5) System.out.println (num);

• A for loop is well suited for executing statements a specific number of times that can be calculated or determined in advance

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// Multiples.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of a for loop.//********************************************************************

import java.util.Scanner;

public class Multiples{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Prints multiples of a user-specified number up to a user- // specified limit. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { final int PER_LINE = 5; int value, limit, mult, count = 0;

Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);

System.out.print("Enter a positive value: "); value = scan.nextInt();

System.out.print("Enter an upper limit: "); limit = scan.nextInt();

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

System.out.println(); System.out.println("The multiples of " + value + " between " + value + " and " + limit + " (inclusive) are:");

for (mult = value; mult <= limit; mult += value) { System.out.print(mult + "\t");

// Print a specific number of values per line of output count++; if (count % PER_LINE == 0) System.out.println(); } }}

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

//********************************************************************// Stars.java Java Foundations//// Demonstrates the use of nested for loops.//********************************************************************

public class Stars{ //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Prints a triangle shape using asterisk (star) characters. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main(String[] args) { final int MAX_ROWS = 10;

for (int row = 1; row <= MAX_ROWS; row++) { for (int star = 1; star <= row; star++) System.out.print("*");

System.out.println(); } }}

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The for Loop• Each expression in the header of a for loop is

optional

• If the initialization is left out, no initialization is performed

• If the condition is left out, it is always considered to be true, and therefore creates an infinite loop

• If the increment is left out, no increment operation is performed

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

Iterators and for Loops• A variant of the for loop simplifies the repetitive

processing for any object that implements the Iterable interface

• An Iterable interface provides an iterator

• For example, if BookList is an Iterable object that manages Book objects, the following loop will print each book:for (Book myBook : BookList) System.out.println (myBook);

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Java Foundations, 3rd Edition, Lewis/DePasquale/Chase

The for-each Loop• This style of for loop can be read "for each Book

in BookList, …"

• This version is sometimes referred to as the for-each loop

• It eliminates the need to call the hasNext and next methods explicitly

• It also will be helpful when processing arrays, which are discussed in Chapter 7

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